“The opportunity over the next few years is staggering,” Microsoft corporate vice president of One Commercial Partner, Gavriella Schuster, said.

Citing IDC research, Schuster said investment in digital transformation initiatives will reach US$2.2 trillion by 2019, representing an increase of almost 60 per cent from 2016.

“That kind of growth presents incredible opportunities for us to bring digital ambitions to life,” Schuster added. “In 2018, I expect introspection and specialisation to be top priorities for partners and customers.

“Business decision makers will be asking their teams: What separates us from the pack? Where do we add core value to our customers’ business?”

According to Schuster, both questions represent “two critical” starting points for any organisation embarking on digital transformation strategies, strategies which “may completely change” a company’s business model in the process.

“A good example is with systems integration requirements, which are now easier to manage,” Schuster explained.

“A customer’s environment can be assembled with the core building blocks on the cloud platform, as opposed to being dependent on the customer’s unique on-premises hardware environments.”

As a result, Schuster said such an approach enables integrators to build repeatable offerings in the market, creating differentiation alongside.

“For instance, let’s say a partner’s core value is an unparalleled understanding of the market and deep trust of their customers,” Schuster added. “With fewer complex integration requirements, they can now focus on the data management parts of their solutions.

“Another partner may decide to cross over into managed services. While it may not have made sense before, they’ll no longer have the heavy burden of a capex environment and can more cost-efficiently manage their customers.

Gavriella Schuster (Microsoft)

“Those are just two examples in which partners can manage on behalf of their customers in new ways and tap into Microsoft’s industry-leading partner ecosystem.”

As outlined by IDC, the majority of digital transformation spending in 2018 will go toward technologies that support new or expanded operating models.

Such investment will be driven by a need for customers to make operations more effective and responsive by leveraging digitally-connected products/services, assets, people and trading partners.

“Every successful company is on a journey to become a digital business,” Microsoft corporate vice president of digital, Anand Eswaran, added.

“However, leaders are up against the fact that they can’t future-proof their businesses. The rapid pace of technological change, coupled with shifting market forces, is leading them into a period of intense, continuous evolution. There’s a lot of opportunity, but it’s not without risk.”

In a direct address to digitally savvy partners, Eswaran advised the channel to help customers identify “desired business outcomes”, leveraging low hanging fruit to help organisations deploy new solutions at a manageable pace.

“The reality of a world where technology is evolving so quickly is that most digital transformations don’t start with an organisation-wide plan of change, but rather with a series of micro-revolutions,” Eswaran added.

“These are small, quick projects that deliver positive business outcomes and build over time to a larger shift in direction.”

Monetising data

From a technology perspective, spending on digital transformation in 2018 will centre around connectivity services, IT services, enterprise hardware and applications.

The end result is a market rapidly gathering pace, according to IDC, with competitive pressures from early adopters beginning to force rival businesses to begin transformation efforts.

Consequently, such pace of change is combining to create new levels of value across cross-industry cloud innovation.

“As we listen to our customers and partners, we’ve learned that while organisations transform at different speeds, there are synergies and opportunities that cross industries,” Microsoft corporate vice president of industry, Toni Townes-Whitley, added.

“At this time next year, new data-rich technologies and business models will be even more deeply embedded across our industries, helping us to address markets and services that we haven’t yet anticipated.”

For Townes-Whitley, the companies that will succeed in the long-term are those using machine learning and artificial intelligence to generate new insights and data applications, designed to “exceed customer expectations”.

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